Laboratory 8 Operational Amplifiers and Analog Computers

Similar documents
Section 4: Operational Amplifiers

Op-Amp Simulation Part II

BME/ISE 3512 Bioelectronics. Laboratory Five - Operational Amplifiers

BME 3512 Bioelectronics Laboratory Five - Operational Amplifiers

DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING AND COMPUTER SCIENCE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS 02139

PHYS 536 The Golden Rules of Op Amps. Characteristics of an Ideal Op Amp

Operational Amplifiers

Chapter 9: Operational Amplifiers

C H A P T E R 02. Operational Amplifiers

Group: Names: Resistor Band Colors Measured Value ( ) R 1 : 1k R 2 : 1k R 3 : 2k R 4 : 1M R 5 : 1M

Lab 6: Instrumentation Amplifier

v 0 = A (v + - v - ) (1)

HOME ASSIGNMENT. Figure.Q3

I1 19u 5V R11 1MEG IDC Q7 Q2N3904 Q2N3904. Figure 3.1 A scaled down 741 op amp used in this lab

LM321 Low Power Single Op Amp

Physics 303 Fall Module 4: The Operational Amplifier

ECEN 325 Lab 5: Operational Amplifiers Part III

Single Supply, Rail to Rail Low Power FET-Input Op Amp AD820

DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING AND COMPUTER SCIENCE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS 02139

Intro To Engineering II for ECE: Lab 7 The Op Amp Erin Webster and Dr. Jay Weitzen, c 2014 All rights reserved.

Lab #6: Op Amps, Part 1

Linear IC s and applications

INDIANA UNIVERSITY, DEPT. OF PHYSICS, P400/540 LABORATORY FALL Laboratory #6: Operational Amplifiers

Analog Electronics. Lecture Pearson Education. Upper Saddle River, NJ, All rights reserved.

Operational Amplifiers. Boylestad Chapter 10

Single Supply, Rail to Rail Low Power FET-Input Op Amp AD820

Laboratory 2 (drawn from lab text by Alciatore)

Hello, and welcome to the TI Precision Labs video series discussing comparator applications. The comparator s job is to compare two analog input

Laboratory 9. Required Components: Objectives. Optional Components: Operational Amplifier Circuits (modified from lab text by Alciatore)

Chapter 2. Operational Amplifiers

OBSOLETE. Low Cost Quad Voltage Controlled Amplifier SSM2164 REV. 0

Instrumentation Amplifiers

Sensor Interfacing and Operational Amplifiers Lab 3

Dimensions in inches (mm) .021 (0.527).035 (0.889) .016 (.406).020 (.508 ) .280 (7.112).330 (8.382) Figure 1. Typical application circuit.

Laboratory 6. Lab 6. Operational Amplifier Circuits. Required Components: op amp 2 1k resistor 4 10k resistors 1 100k resistor 1 0.

OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER PREPARED BY, PROF. CHIRAG H. RAVAL ASSISTANT PROFESSOR NIRMA UNIVRSITY

Summer 2015 Examination

EE 368 Electronics Lab. Experiment 10 Operational Amplifier Applications (2)

EE 3305 Lab I Revised July 18, 2003

Introduction to Analog Interfacing. ECE/CS 5780/6780: Embedded System Design. Various Op Amps. Ideal Op Amps

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHARLOTTE Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering

UNISONIC TECHNOLOGIES CO., LTD LM321

Chapter 10: Operational Amplifiers

Homework Assignment 03

EE431 Lab 1 Operational Amplifiers

Model 176 and 178 DC Amplifiers

Chapter 9: Operational Amplifiers

10: AMPLIFIERS. Circuit Connections in the Laboratory. Op-Amp. I. Introduction

ES250: Electrical Science. HW6: The Operational Amplifier

L02 Operational Amplifiers Applications 1

Operational Amplifiers

Gechstudentszone.wordpress.com

Başkent University Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering EEM 311 Electronics II Experiment 8 OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIERS

Operational Amplifiers

LM13600 Dual Operational Transconductance Amplifiers with Linearizing Diodes and Buffers

Lab 4: Analysis of the Stereo Amplifier

CA3140, CA3140A. 4.5MHz, BiMOS Operational Amplifier with MOSFET Input/Bipolar Output. Description. Features. Applications. Ordering Information

PURPOSE: NOTE: Be sure to record ALL results in your laboratory notebook.

In-Class Exercises for Lab 2: Input and Output Impedance

Dimensions in inches (mm) .268 (6.81).255 (6.48) .390 (9.91).379 (9.63) .045 (1.14).030 (.76) 4 Typ. Figure 1. Typical application circuit.

Operational Amplifier

Lab 4 - Operational Amplifiers 1 Gain ReadMeFirst

Op Amp Booster Designs

USER MANUAL FOR THE LM2901 QUAD VOLTAGE COMPARATOR FUNCTIONAL MODULE

ECE3204 D2015 Lab 1. See suggested breadboard configuration on following page!

Each question is worth 4 points. ST07 One-hour Quiz #2 1 3/20/2007

Integrated Circuit: Classification:

2. The. op-amp in and 10K. (a) 0 Ω. (c) 0.2% (d) (a) 0.02K. (b) 4. The. 5 V, then. 0V (virtual. (a) (c) Fall V. (d) V.

Operational Amplifiers

Multi-Transistor Configurations

Amplification. Objective. Equipment List. Introduction. The objective of this lab is to demonstrate the basic characteristics an Op amplifier.

Electronics and Instrumentation Name ENGR-4220 Spring 1999 Section Experiment 4 Introduction to Operational Amplifiers

tyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopas dfghjklzxcvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzx cvbnmqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmq

Laboratory 2. Lab 2. Instrument Familiarization and Basic Electrical Relations. Required Components: 2 1k resistors 2 1M resistors 1 2k resistor

AME140 Lab #4 ---Basic OP-AMP circuits

DEPARTMENT OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING LAB WORK EE301 ELECTRONIC CIRCUITS

CHAPTER-6. OP-AMP A. 2 B. 3 C. 4 D. 1

KM4110/KM mA, Low Cost, +2.7V & +5V, 75MHz Rail-to-Rail Amplifiers

INTEGRATED CIRCUITS. AN109 Microprocessor-compatible DACs Dec

EE 210 Lab Exercise #5: OP-AMPS I

LF442 Dual Low Power JFET Input Operational Amplifier

11. Audio Amp. LM386 Low Power Amplifier:

IC Preamplifier Challenges Choppers on Drift

UNIT I. Operational Amplifiers

Chapter 2. Operational Amplifiers

1.0V Micropower, SOT23, Operational Amplifier

ECE 363 FINAL (F16) 6 problems for 100 pts Problem #1: Fuel Pump Controller (18 pts)

Lecture Notes Unit-III

LM613 Dual Operational Amplifiers, Dual Comparators, and Adjustable Reference

Input Stage Concerns. APPLICATION NOTE 656 Design Trade-Offs for Single-Supply Op Amps

Experiment 1: Amplifier Characterization Spring 2019

UNIVERSITY OF UTAH ELECTRICAL AND COMPUTER ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT ELECTROMYOGRAM (EMG) DETECTOR WITH AUDIOVISUAL OUTPUT

Operational Amplifier BME 360 Lecture Notes Ying Sun

Week 8 AM Modulation and the AM Receiver

Dual operational amplifier

Concepts to be Reviewed

EE LINEAR INTEGRATED CIRCUITS & APPLICATIONS

INDIANA UNIVERSITY, DEPT. OF PHYSICS, P400/540 LABORATORY FALL Laboratory #5: More Transistor Amplifier Circuits

UNIT- IV ELECTRONICS

LM125 Precision Dual Tracking Regulator

Transcription:

Laboratory 8 Operational Amplifiers and Analog Computers Introduction Laboratory 8 page 1 of 6 Parts List LM324 dual op amp Various resistors and caps Pushbutton switch (SPST, NO) In this lab, you will use the LM324 operational amplifier (op amp). You will build several standard op amp circuits, including a buffer, an inverting amplifier, and a summer. You will also build a system of integrators that operate together to solve a second-order differential equation (an expanding or damped sinusoid). You will only use 3 pins from the MicroBLIP for this lab (see Fig. 1). As before, you will use +5 V (column 12B) and ground (column 14B). You will also use the MicroBLIP s -5V power supply for the first time, so a few notes are in order. The +5V power supply from the MicroBLIP can source about 500 ma (be sure the USB hub is plugged into its power supply). In contrast, the -5V power supply generated by the MicroBLIP s on-board DC-to-DC converter (TC7662), and can only sink about 40 ma. It must therefore be used sparingly and does not require a bus on the breadboard. Leave the (-) blue busses on the breadboard to be used for ground and the (+) red busses to be +5V, as in previous labs. Fig. 1

Laboratory 8 page 2 of 6 The Operational Amplifier In the previous lab, you used a comparator LM324 Dual Operational Amplifier (LM339), a stripped-down type of op amp Positive/Negative supply voltage ±1.5 to ±16 V designed mainly to compare two input voltages Quiescent Supply Current 700 µa and report which is higher. The comparator Voltage Gain 100 db basically has two expected output states, high CMMR 85 db (the + power supply) and low (ground). Max Input Current 5 na In the present lab, you move on to a fullfledged operational amplifier (op amp), in Min Output Voltage Swing (±5 V supply) ±3.5 V Max Output Current 40 ma particular, the LM324. Review the specs in Fig. Slew Rate 0.25 V/µs 2 for the LM324. Instead of the Open Collector Max Offset Voltage (input + to -) 2 mv output of the comparator, the full op amp has a Output type Push-Pull Push-Pull output, which can both source and Fig. 2 sink current. By supplying the op amp with ±5 V power, you will enable it to output any voltage between ±3.5 V. Why can t the op amp get closer to the ±5 V power supply (often called the rails )? The reason is that, within the op amp s integrated circuitry, there are transistors between the power supply and the output, and there is always some voltage lost in these transistors. This loss is reflected in the Min Output Voltage Swing of ±3.5 V in the specifications. Whereas the comparator output is digital, either on or off, the op amp output is analog. Thus, instead of a Response Time, which for the LM339 comparator is 1 µs, the specs for the LM324 op amp define a Slew Rate, 0.25 V/µs. At that rate, how long would the LM324 take to change from -2V to +2V (A)? Comparators (and digital circuits in general) are inherently fast because they can slam into the rails. Op Amps (and analog circuits in general) have a more difficult task, stabilizing at some arbitrary desired voltage, and this takes longer. Whereas the voltage gain of a perfect op amp is infinite, that of the LM324 is 100 db. What ratio of output to input voltage does this represent (B)? The Common Mode Rejection Ratio (CMRR), for the LM324 is 85 db. What ratio does this represent between the out-of-phase to the in-phase gain of the op amp? (C)

Laboratory 8 page 3 of 6 Build the circuit shown in Figs. 4 and 5, using two op amps from a single LM324 chip (labeled 1 in the schematic). Note in the pin-out for the chip (Fig. 3) that the power connections to pins 4 and 11 supply both op amps internally on the chip, are thus shown only once in Fig. 4. Certain key nodes in the circuit are labeled with letters. Thus nodes (a), (b), (d) and (e) are test points where voltages will be measured, and point (c) is an input where a test voltage can be applied. In the following sections, you will make calculations and compare them to your measurements, applying various voltages to point (c). Note the connection from the -5 V pin of the MicroBLIP (column T18) to pin 11 of the LM342 (its negative power). As discussed earlier, the negative supply can only sink 40 ma and is just used to power the op amps. The power busses on the breadboard should be left for +5 V and ground. Fig. 4 Fig. 3 Fig. 5 3/19/18 6:43:00 AM 2012 George

Buffer (Unity Gain Amplifier) Laboratory 8 page 4 of 6 The first op amp is configured as a simple buffer. Its output, point (b) (pin 1), should follow the voltage at the op amp s (+) input, point (a) (pin 3). What does this circuit accomplish? Rather than simply using a voltage divider to provide a desired voltage output, which would change with a load resistance, adding a buffer creates a voltage that is stable over a wide range of currents through loads of varying resistance. The buffer output acts like an almost perfect voltage source, up to the maximum output current of the op amp, which for the LM324 is as high as 40 ma. Calculate the expected voltage at point (a) using the indicated resistances in the voltage divider and the nominal 5 V power supply (D). With your voltmeter in the 2 V range, measure the voltage at point (a) relative to ground and compare to your calculation. What sources of error can you postulate in your calculation (E)? Which property of the ideal op amp permits you to ignore current into pin 3 of the op amp (F)? To determine whether this assumption of an ideal op amp is valid, find the Maximum Input Current for the LM324 the its specifications (Fig. 3), and then calculate the current through the voltage divider (10 KW and 1 KW resistors) for comparison. Approximately how many orders of magnitude smaller is the current into the op amp s input (G)? Measure and record the voltage at point (b) and compare to the voltage at point (a). Is this consistent with the stated Maximum Offset Voltage in the specifications for the LM324 (H)? Inverting Amplifier Now consider the second op amp, which is set up as an inverting amplifier. With point (c) unattached (floating), there will be no current through R 2, so it can be ignored. The voltage at point (b) serves as the only input to the inverting amplifier. Compute the predicted voltage at point (e), showing the formula you have used (I). Measure the voltage at pin (e), compare to your calculations, and state whether this is within the range of tolerances of the resistors (5%) (J). Measure the voltage at point (d), the virtual ground (pin 6 of the LM324) and state whether this is within the specifications for Maximum Offset Voltage. (K) Summer A summer can be constructed using the inverting amplifier by introducing a voltage at point (c), providing a second source of current into the virtual ground (through R 2 ) and beyond into the feedback resistor R F. Write an equation to predict the voltage at (e) given three different input voltages at point (c): +5 V, 0 V, and -5 V. (L) Measure the voltage at point (e) with the same 3 voltages at (c) and compare to your predictions. (M)

Laboratory 8 page 5 of 6 Sine Wave Generator The final circuit you will build is inspired by analog computers, which were used before digital computers, to solve differential equations in real time. In this circuit (Fig. 6), two integrators and an inverting amplifier are in connected into a loop, such that the negative double integral of the input is presented back to itself. The solution to this differential equation is a sinusoid with a certain frequency, but the amplitude of the sinusoid is indeterminate. This problem is addressed by embedding a decaying exponential in the system, which makes the sinusoid go to zero amplitude, and then introducing a positive exponential with the push of a button, which makes the sinusoid spring to life. When the button is released, the sinusoid decays to zero again. Thus, this circuit is the equivalent of plucking a guitar string. Fig. 6 Fig. 7 3/19/18 6:43:00 AM 2012 George

Laboratory 8 page 6 of 6 The equations governing the sinusoid, as well as the positive and negative exponentials, are shown in Fig. 8. Notice that both integrators have the same values of R 1 and C 1. The decaying (negative) exponential is implemented by discharging C 1 through R 3. The expanding (positive) exponential is implemented by doing the opposite (charging) C 1 through R 3 by means of the inverting amplifier, when the button is pushed. Attach the scope to two points in the circuit: pin 8 of the LM324 (labeled V ) and pin 1 (integral of V), as shown in Fig. 7. Remember to attach the ground leads as well (bottom of Fig. 7). Set the sweep speed to 1 div/sec. Press the button (and hold it for a few seconds) and you should see the sinusoid and its integral start to grow. They will eventually grow to the power supply level and be clipped into a square wave. When you release the button, the sinusoids should decay to zero. Sketch the two signals seen on the screen, including units (N). Compute the theoretical frequency of the sine wave in Hz from the equations in Fig. 8 (recalling that w is radians/second), then estimate the frequency looking at the scope and compare the two values (O). Fig. 8